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Jazmin L. Brown-Iannuzzi

Researcher at University of Virginia

Publications -  40
Citations -  1354

Jazmin L. Brown-Iannuzzi is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Economic inequality & Socioeconomic status. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 37 publications receiving 941 citations. Previous affiliations of Jazmin L. Brown-Iannuzzi include University of Kentucky & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Sequential Priming Measures of Implicit Social Cognition A Meta-Analysis of Associations With Behavior and Explicit Attitudes

TL;DR: A comprehensive meta-analysis of 167 studies found that sequential priming tasks were significantly associated with behavioral measures and with explicit attitude measures and indicated that sequentialpriming—one of the earliest methods of investigating implicit social cognition—continues to be a valid tool for the psychological scientist.
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Subjective Status Shapes Political Preferences

TL;DR: In four studies, correlation and experimental evidence is found that subjective status motivates shifts in support for redistributive policies along with the ideological principles that justify them.
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Economic inequality increases risk taking

TL;DR: Higher inequality in the outcomes of an economic game led participants to take greater risks to try to achieve higher outcomes, suggesting that inequality may promote a range of poor outcomes, in part, by increasing risky behavior.
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Historical roots of implicit bias in slavery

TL;DR: The historical roots of geographical differences in implicit bias are investigated by comparing average levels of implicit bias with the number of slaves in areas more dependent on slavery in 1860, supporting an interpretation of implicit biases as the cognitive residue of past and present structural inequalities.
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The Relationship Between Mental Representations of Welfare Recipients and Attitudes Toward Welfare

TL;DR: Mental images of welfare recipients may bias attitudes toward welfare policies, and the average welfare-recipient image was perceived as more African American and more representative of stereotypes associated with welfare recipients and African Americans.